TikTok's time: video platform sees appeal growing during lockdowns

This is TikTok's time. The social video platform which was already a favorite of teens is increasingly being used by adults looking for ways to pass the time during coronavirus lockdowns.

FILES) In this file photo taken on February 14, 2020 youths act in front of a mobile phone camera while making a TikTok video on the terrace of their residence in Hyderabad. This is TikTok's time. The social video platform which was already a favorite of teens is increasingly being used by adults looking for ways to pass the time during coronavirus lockdowns.
NOAH SEELAM / AFP

Users post short videos -- no longer than 60 seconds but often as short as 15 -- to showcase their bite-size dance skills or share relatable experiences with a humorous twist.
The application, owned by Chinese tech company ByteDance, saw 65 million worldwide downloads in March, according to analytics site SensorTower.
In addition to the existing 800 million reported in January by DataReportal, the app is nearing a billion users -- though TikTok itself does not publish such data.
And though teens have been posting on the platform for months, it seems adults with more free time -- as much of the world is encouraged to stay at home to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus -- are finally catching on.
Cecile, stuck at home in Paris with her six- and three-year-old children, was intrigued when a friend sent her a video. Soon, she had downloaded the app and was posting clips herself.
"I said to myself: 'Well, this is something funny I could do with the boys to pass the time, if only for fifteen minutes,'" she said.
"When I say, 'Come on, we're making a video,' they're ready to go. It makes them laugh."
Celebrities have joined the fun too, from Jennifer Lopez to Mariah Carey -- even 82-year-old Jane Fonda.
Social media use is up across the board as movement is restricted around the world, but TikTok -- already having a moment before the pandemic -- is doing better than others.
Idyllic vacation views and perfectly framed artistic shots -- long the markers of the Instagram aesthetic -- are currently out of reach for most.
But the typical TikTok post does not require a beautiful background, explained Thibault Le Ouay, founder of Pentos, a company that helps brands with their marketing strategy on the platform.
"On TikTok, you do a dance in your own house," he said, pointing to 15-year-old Charli D'Amelio, one of the app's biggest stars with 46 million subscribers.
"She is at home in leggings. It's not a video of a beach paradise," he said. "It's still something you can do at home."
Plus, TikTok has levity baked into its DNA.
Many videos on the platform -- a descendant of the website Musical.ly -- are amateur performances of short choreographed dances and lip syncs to song clips, repeated and riffed on over and over.
"It's a very interesting position to be in for TikTok right now, because the videos are generally pretty light, humorous, fun and easy," said Debra Aho Williamson, principal analyst for market research company eMarketer.

"And with all of the negative news that people are hearing on a daily basis from other media, TikTok is something different, and I think that people need that right now."

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